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A review is an evaluation of a publication, such as a movie, video game, musical composition, or book or a piece of hardware like a car, appliance, or computer. In addition to a critical statement, the review's author may assign the work a rating (for instance, one to five stars) to indicate its relative merit. More loosely, an author may review current events or items in the news.

A compilation of reviews may itself be called a review. The New York Review of Books, for instance, is a collection of essays on literature, culture, and current affairs. National Review, founded by William F. Buckley, Jr., is an influential conservative magazine, and Monthly Review is a long-running socialist periodical.

In terms of scientific literature, reviews is a category of scientific paper, which provides a synthesis of research on a topic at that moment in time. A compilation of these reviews forms the core content of a 'tertiary' scientific journal, with examples including Annual Reviews, the Nature Reviews series of journals and Trends.

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L.A. Times - Books & Talks

'The Second Plane' by Martin Amis
Mon, 14 Apr 2008 00:00:00 -0700
September 11: Terror and Boredom IT would be too easy to read Martin Amis' slim book on Sept. 11 in a day and to dismiss it with a politically correct glare. The dozen essays, columns and reviews and two short stories in "The Second Plane: September 11, Terror and Boredom" are more illuminating than that, though deeply, sometimes self-indulgently flawed.
'The House of Widows' by Askold Melnyczuk
Mon, 07 Apr 2008 00:00:00 -0700
Family secrets lie at the end of a dark and twisted path FROM its puzzling opening line ("The most common grammatical error is the lie"), there's an ominous vibe to Askold Melnyczuk's third novel, "The House of Widows," and the sense of unease lingers until the final sentence. It's a mysterious, masterfully taut story in which dread plays a prominent role.
'Marco Polo' by Laurence Bergreen
Wed, 24 Oct 2007 00:00:00 -0700
An account of the adventures of the celebrated 13th century world traveler. MARCO POLO was only 17 when he departed for China in 1271 with his father, Niccolò, and his uncle, Maffeo. Those two merchants of Venice were known to the boy primarily as storytellers of their fabulous exploits, writes award-winning biographer and historian Laurence Bergreen, for they had been absent more than 16 years, Marco's entire childhood. The pair had followed trade routes east, encountered exotic countries and customs and survived many perils; they had even lived for a time at the court of Kublai Khan, the leader of the Mongol Empire. Eventually they agreed to accompany his emissary west to the pope, vowing to return to Cambulac (Beijing) with several items the Great Khan had requested.

NYT > Books

African Idyll
Fri, 05 Sep 2008 20:50:47 -0000
The Times’s Helene Cooper fled a warring Liberia as a child. In this memoir, she returns to confront the ghosts of her past -- and to find a lost sister.
Books of The Times: A Leader Beyond Denial, as War Plans Flounder
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 19:52:34 -0000
Bob Woodward paints a picture of an administration shrugging off bad news and postponing decisions as the crisis in Iraq deepened.
True Grit
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 03:40:44 -0000
In a new story collection, Annie Proulx returns to disrupt the mythology of the Old West.

Fiction & Poetry

Yusef Komunyakaa: The Clay Army
Yusef Komunyakaa Mon, 01 Sep 2008 04:00:00 -0000
When the roof of the First Emperor of Qin’s tomb caved in, six thousand life-size terra-cotta soldiers knelt beneath its crumbling weight in the first pit, alongside horses & chariots. Centuries before, when the clay figures stood in perfect formation, the rebel general Xiang Yu looted this sanctuary of . . .
Mary Jo Bang: Beast Brutality
Mary Jo Bang Mon, 01 Sep 2008 04:00:00 -0000
The caption read, “He and she standing quietly next to a dog.” The prompt queen sat with her crown on, The insets between each Gothic arch providing a measure Of what can be Done with architecture. She said, “We built it long ago. And then we knocked it down.” And . . .
Alice Munro: Face
Alice Munro Mon, 01 Sep 2008 04:00:00 -0000
I am convinced that my father looked at me, really saw me, only once. After that, he knew what was there. In those days, they didn’t let fathers into the glare of the theatre where babies were born, or into the room where the women about to give birth were . . .

London Review of Books

Kemalism · Perry Anderson: After the Ottomans
'The greatest single truth to declare itself in the wake of 1989,' J.G.A. Pocock wrote two years afterwards,is that the frontiers of 'Europe' towards the east are everywhere open and indeterminate. 'Europe', it can now be seen, is not a continent - as in the ancient geographers' dream - but a subcontinent: a peninsula of the Eurasian landmass, like India in being inhabited by a highly distinctive chain of interacting cultures, but unlike it in lacking a clearly marked geophysical frontier. Instead of Afghanistan and the Himalayas, there are vast level areas through which conventional 'Europe' shades into conventional 'Asia', and few would recognise the Ural mountains if they ever reached them.But, he went on, empires - of which in its fashion the European Union must be accounted one - had always needed to determine the space in which they exercised their power, fixing the borders of fear or attraction around them.
What Works Doesn't Work · Ross McKibbin: Politics without Ideas
In 1964, Harold Wilson described the record of the (outgoing) Conservative government as '13 wasted years'. If the present Parliament lasts its full term - as seems likely - the electorate will be asked to pass judgment on 13 years of Labour rule. Voters today seem to have the same view of Labour as Wilson had of the Tories all those years ago. Many who once wished Labour well are now wondering whether they can vote Labour at all, or whether they should stop voting tactically. This is an important decision: the Labour majorities in the last three elections have been much enlarged by people choosing to vote for the candidate thought most likely to defeat the Tory - a spontaneous alternative vote. Since the country's politicians have refused to reform the country's medieval system of voting, the electorate has reformed it for itself. But it is a reform without any statutory basis: people can choose to practise it or not. Labour thus faces a double threat. Not merely that people will no longer vote Labour, but that they will vote as they really want to - Lib Dem, for example - whatever the consequences. And they will do so because they no longer believe keeping the Tories out is the main object of politics. Labour's position, though not irrecoverable, is therefore serious, approaching desperate.
What Condoleezza Said · Tony Wood: Why Did Saakashvili Do It?
The conflict in South Ossetia has produced a cloud of rhetoric that seems to have grown in inverse proportion to the intensity of fighting on the ground. Once the outcome became clear - a crushing Russian military victory - Cold War imagery flooded the Western press. Far more than the status of a tiny mountainous enclave in the South Caucasus was said to be at stake: not only was Georgia's territorial integrity imperilled by Russian tyranny, but the future of democracy was under threat. In the Washington Post of 11 August, Robert Kagan asserted that the conflict will be seen as 'a turning point no less significant' than the fall of the Berlin Wall. Given this 'much bigger drama', 'the details of who did what to precipitate Russia's war against Georgia are not very important.'

guardian.co.uk Books

Review: American current affairs roundup
James Robinson Sat, 06 Sep 2008 23:09:02 -0000
Review: American current affairs roundupBush-bashing is big business, in London and Washington as well as Cairo and Karachi, where bookshelves groan under the weight of titles like Why Do We Hate America? says James Robinson
Review: The Believers by Adam Mars-Jones
Adam Mars-Jones Sat, 06 Sep 2008 23:09:02 -0000
Review: The Believers by Adam Mars-JonesClashing ideologies and repressed anger are among the subjects of Zoe Heller's fitfully brilliant history of a complex, dysfunctional New York Jewish family says Adam Mars-Jones
Review: Man in the Dark by Paul Auster
Jenny Diski Sat, 06 Sep 2008 23:09:00 -0000
Review: Man in the Dark by Paul AusterPaul Auster follows Pirandello and Philip K Dick with decidedly mixed results says Jenny Diski

NPR Topics: Books

New Book Collects Copp Children Stories
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 11:06:00 -0400
Scott Simon speaks with Weekend Edition's Daniel Pinkwater, about a new book called Jim Copp, Will You Tell Me A Story?" The book is a collection of three of Copp and Ed Brown's stories for children, put in book form for the first time.
Palin Autobiography Reissued
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 10:59:00 -0400
Scott Simon takes a moment to note that a biography of Sarah Palin, Republican vice presidential candidate, has been quickly reissued. The book reveals Palin's favorite meal: moose stew.
Novel's Young Narrator Tells Family's Story
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 10:54:00 -0400
Author Matthew Kneale discusses his new book When We Were Romans, the story of a mother and her two young children who flee London to stay with friends in Rome. Kneale wrote the book from the point of view of a nine-year-old.

Slashdot: Book Reviews

Blown to Bits
samzenpus Wed, 03 Sep 2008 15:19:00 -0000
Ray Lodato writes "Few people would deny that the world has changed significantly since the explosion of the Internet. Our access to immense volumes of data has made our lives both easier and less secure. Hal Abelson, Ken Ledeen, and Harry Lewis have written an intriguing analysis of many of the issues that have erupted due to the ubiquity of digital data, not only on the Internet but elsewhere. Blown to Bits: Your Life, Liberty, and Happiness After the Digital Explosion, published by Addison-Wesley, digs into many of the ramifications of making so much information available to the world at large. As I read through the book, I was alternately fascinated and horrified at what information is available, and how it is being used and abused." Keep reading for the rest of Ray's review.Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Bottom of the Barrel Book Reviews — Special Operations Team Raptor
samzenpus Tue, 02 Sep 2008 18:12:00 -0000
If you like stories about maverick billionaires, cliche mercenaries, government sponsored super hero teams, leading edge technology and the ultimate evil of an alien human resources dept. then Special Operations Team Raptor The African Incident, by Daniel A. Dawson, just might be for you. Weighing in at a mere 103 pages, SOTR will only waste a few hours of your life. While it may be as fresh and creative as a crafts class at summer camp, it's not a complete waste of your time. Keep reading below to see if your mom would like it as much as your macaroni art.Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Zero Day Threat
samzenpus Wed, 27 Aug 2008 17:10:00 -0000
Ben Rothke writes "Zero Day Threat: the Shocking Truth of How Banks and Credit Bureaus Help Cyber Crooks Steal Your Money and Identity is an interesting and eye-opening look at how banks and credit card companies make ID theft and fraud rather elementary. But with all that, this book must be read in the larger context of how today's society deals with, and is often oblivious to, risk. When is comes to risk, American society tolerates tens of thousands of drunk-driving deaths, gives millions in federal tobacco subsidies, and is oblivious about near-epidemics such as heart disease, obesity, and diabetes. With all that, it is doubtful that the myriad horror stories Zero Day Threat details will persuade Congress or the other players to do anything to curtail the problem with identity theft and internet fraud." Keep reading for the rest of Ben's review.Read more of this story at Slashdot.

 
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Fantasy Archive - Extensive archive with reviews of SF books and movies, gathered from Usenet over several years.

500 Fantasy Works - Lists and discusses fantasy and SF authors and their works on the basis of literary merit, not genre standards.

Alternative Worlds - Harriet Klausner's reviews of science fiction and fantasy books.

Aphra's Science Fiction and Fantasy Library - Science fiction and fantasy reviews, recommendations and ratings.
Meta Description: [ Reviews of science fiction and fantasy books and links to SF & F sites, plus opportunity to buy online, sign guestbook and submit reviews. ]

Betty's Book Reviews - Short book reviews; mostly science fiction and fantasy, but also other fiction, non-fiction and humor.

Bookwarp - Includes reviews, subject lists, top tens and awards.
Meta Description: [ Bookwarp Science Fiction Book Reviews. Sci-fi fantasy and graphic novels reviewed, also subject lists and field awards lists. Updated frequently. ]

Danny Yee's Science Fiction Reviews - Reviews of thirty odd works of science fiction, a slightly odd selection.
Meta Description: [ Banks, Barr, Bell, Brin, Capek, Cherryh, Egan, Larbalestier, Le Guin, Lem, MacLeod, May, McDonald, Mieville, Piercy, Robinson, Sawyer, Shippey, Slusser, Stephenson, Sterling, Strugatsky, Sundman, Swirski, Tepper, Thompson, Tiptree Jr, Vinge, Vinge, Willis, Zelazny ]

Dark Crossings - Josh Lehto's reviews of SF and fantasy literature.
Meta Description: [ Reviews & Lists of literary and genre books that use otherworldly imagery to explore realworld themes. ]

DiverseBooks - News and reviews website incorporating a paper based fanzine giving daily updates on Science Fiction, Fantasy, Humour, and Computing books.

Dragon Page Reviews - Reviews of genre books from a SFF radio talk show.
Meta Description: [ Reviews of science fiction and fantasy books, movies, TV shows and more on The Dragon Page ]

EvilAndroids.com - Science fiction and fantasy book reviews.

Fantastic Reviews - Book reviews of science fiction, fantasyand horror novels.
Meta Description: [ Book rewiews of science fiction, fantasy, and horror novels, collections, and anthologies. Author interviews ]

I, Human - Reviews - SFF novel reviews.
Meta Description: [ ihumanreviews Science Fiction and Horror reviews ]

IBDOF - Mainly SFF works from The Internet Book Database of Fiction.

In Other Worlds - Science Fiction, Fantasy and Mystery reviews, with synopses, indices, ratings and search tools. Updated weekly.
Meta Description: [ Books in Fantasy, Science Fiction and Mystery sorted by Author ]

Justin's Place - An eclectic site which includes reviews of science fiction novels.
Meta Description: [ Justin's Science Fiction reviews ]

Martin's Si Fi - Sci-fi and Fantasy book reviews (Star Trek, Battletech, Shadowrun, Star Wars) and guides to these sci-fi universes. Partly bilingual, partly English or German only.
Meta Description: [ Martin's Sci Fi is about science fiction books & novels and a bit about sci-fi games... ]

Peacemaker - Reviews of near future SF novels.
Meta Description: [ HELPING READERS SELECT OUTSTANDING SCIENCE FICTION BOOKS, SUSPENSE THRILLERS AND NON-FICTION BASED ON LEADING EDGE SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. Included are works that focus on artificial intelligence, robotics, nanotechnology and genetic engineering; and suspense thrillers and hard science fiction boo... ]

Rambles - A fast-growing cultural arts magazine, reviews science fiction novels.

Raven's Reviews - Reviews of science fiction, fantasy and horror books by c. 50 authors. Has categories and a top 100 list.
Meta Description: [ Book Reviews for authors in the genres of Fantasy, Science Fiction, Horror, and Historical. Critical reviews and introductions to each author's style and subject matter. ]

404 Science Fiction - Reviews on Science Fiction written by consumers at Epinions.com.
Meta Description: [ Epinions has the best comparison shopping information on Epinions.com - This Page Cannot Be Found. Compare prices from across the web and read reviews from other consumers on Epinions.com - This Page Cannot Be Found before you decide to buy. ]

Science Fiction and Fantasy Audio - Reviews of and commentary on Science Fiction and Fantasy Audiobooks and Audio Drama.
Meta Description: [ Discover the finest in Science Fiction Audiobooks, Fantasy Audiobooks, and Audio Drama. ]

500 SciFi Review - User submitted science fiction reviews.

SF Reviews - Biased and superficial reviews of old and new science fiction books.
Meta Description: [ Welcome to SF Reviews - biased and superficial Science Fiction reviews ]

SFBook.com - News and reviews about both new and classic science fiction books. Visitors can add authors, books, comment and their own reviews.
Meta Description: [ Review, news and views ]

500 SFBookcase.com - Information about new and old science fiction and fantasy novels. Users can recommend authors and rate books.
Meta Description: [ SFBookcase homepage. SFbookcase gives you all of the information about new science fiction and fantasy novels. It also acts as a reference contains information on hundreds of old novels. Users can recommend authors and rate books so that other readers can benefit from their experience. SFBookcase... ]

500 SFReader.com - Online community for fans of science fiction, fantasy, and horror novels.

Ste5en's Science Fiction and Horror book reviews - Short reviews of SF and Horror books.
Meta Description: [ Short reviews of Science Fiction and Horror books. ]

Steven Silver's Book Reviews - This site contains a number of lengthy reviews of SF works.

Steven Wu's SF Book Reviews - Reviews of a variety of science fiction and fantasy books.

Strange Words - A monthly online journal featuring book reviews and articles of science fiction interest. Featured is a archive of book reviews.
Meta Description: [ The Absolutely Weird Bookshelf sells fine science fiction, fantasy, horror, and speculative fiction books for the discerning reader and collector ]

The Otherhood: Science Fiction Review - Ten SFF books of the month reviewed.
Meta Description: [ A 10 best TOP 10 science fiction fantasy review site - Reviews of the best science fiction books and where to buy them at the cheapest prices. The Otherhood also examines terrorism in the future, political science fiction through the eyes of author, Lytchcov Zammana. ]

404 The Stone Chronicles - Reviews for various SF and Fantasy novels. Submit reviews or read others' submissions.

The Storyteller's Archive - Book review site dedicated to science fiction and fantasy novels.

The StuPage Book Reviews - The first part of the review is my personal feelings about the book. Following that is the summary from the inside cover.
Meta Description: [ The first part of this page are reviews of books that I have read. The first part of the review is my personal feelings about the book. Following that is the summary from the inside cover (enclosed in quotation marks). I was going to right my own summaries but figured they paid these people ... ]

Voidhawk Book Reviews - Reviews of science fiction and fantasy books, grouped by author.
Meta Description: [ This is an index page with a list of book reviews. ]

Vulcan Ears Book Reviews - Book review site focusing on science fiction, with some fantasy (and the odd computer science book too).
Meta Description: [ Vulcanears is a book review site focusing on science fiction, with some fantasy and computer science. ]

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